Paleontologists have discovered a new species of dinosaur with a softball-sized lump of solid bone on top of its skull, according to a paper published in the April issue of the journal Cretaceous Research.
The species was a plant-eating dinosaur about as big as a medium-sized dog that lived 70 to 80 million years ago, said Nicholas Longrich of Yale University, lead author of the paper. The team discovered two skull fragments in Big Bend National Park in southwest Texas in 2008. They compared them to dozens of fossils from related species found in Canada and Montana before confirming that the fossils represented a new genus of pachycephalosaur, a group of bipedal, thick-skulled dinosaurs.
The researchers named the new species Texacephale langstoni. ("Texacephale" means "Texas head" and "langstoni" is in honor of Wann Langston, a fellow paleontologist.) The new species is one of about a dozen known to have solid lumps of bone on top of their skulls, which Longrich speculates was probably used to ram one another head-on in a manner similar to modern-day musk oxen and cape buffalo.
The discovery of the new species lends further weight to the idea, which has gained popularity in recent years, that dinosaurs found in Canada and the northern United States were distinct from their southern neighbors.
"Instead of roaming across the North American continent, we see pockets of different dinosaurs that are pretty isolated from one another," Longrich said. "Every time we get good fossils from Texas, they end up looking very different from those to the north."
Because fossils from the Big Bend region are rare and tend to be poorly preserved, scientists do not have a complete picture of the different species that once inhabited the area, Longrich said.
But the team may have uncovered an important piece of the puzzle with their discovery. They found that this particular group of dinosaurs, which was previously thought to have originated in Asia, likely evolved in North America.
Longrich expects more related species to be discovered in the future as fossils from the Texas site and elsewhere continue to be examined.
"I think we underestimate how many different species there were," he says.
That last quote is an interesting one. We underestimate the number of species runs in vast contrast to some other statements from other groups as of late.
Part of the reason for this is a lot of the research on Late Cretaceous dinosaurs of North America is done by Horner and his disciples, who strongly support the idea of "overestimated species diversity due to ontogeny", which fits in with their idea of dinosaur diversity sharply decreasing during the last few million years of the Cretaceous. However, when we look at the biodiversity during this time, we see less of a homogenous fauna across the entire country, and more of a "north-meets-south" matchup across the Midwest, with one ecoregion expanding from Wyoming north, the other going from Wyoming and part of Colorado south. Really weird versions of these faunas (with stuff like Pachyrhinosaurus and Velafrons) can be found at the extreme ends of both ecoregions.
ReplyDeleteThe Western Interior Seaway could be a cause of isolation of northeastern and southwestern dinosaurs, particularly in the Late Cretaceous. The connectedness of the land masses in North America changed rapidly through this time period, and using our present-day sense of geography can mislead us.
ReplyDeleteTexacephale is probably just a juvenile female endemic form of Pachycephalosaurus. :-D
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